After making 2 of 17 shots to open the second half, the visiting Blue Devils (22-2, 10-1 Atlantic Coast Conference) got hot and shut down the Cardinals over the final 9:54. Zion Williamson (27 points, 12 rebounds) ignored foul trouble and instead drew whistles in his favor, making 8 of 9 from the line before Reddish added a couple of 3s in between free throws — the last two of which followed an official review of a play under Duke's basket.

Christen Cunningham tried to tie it for Louisville (17-8, 8-4), but his jumper in the lane bounced off the rim and into Williamson's hands as the final seconds ticked off. The Blue Devils celebrated as they left the court after completing the second-biggest second-half comeback in program history.

Reddish scored 16 of his 22 points after halftime and RJ Barrett added 13 for Duke, which won its eighth in a row despite shooting a season-low 37 percent from the field.

Jordan Nwora had 23 points and Dwayne Sutton 15 for Louisville, which dropped its second straight. The Cardinals shot 42 percent but just 9 of 24 in the second half.

With the game tied after the Wildcats’ Keldon Johnson made two free throws with 6 seconds left, Skylar Mays drove the length of the court. His shot missed, but Bigby-Williams got the offensive rebound and scored to give the Tigers their first win over the Wildcats since 2009.

It was just the sixth time ever that LSU (20-4, 10-1 Southeastern Conference) has beaten Kentucky (20-4, 10-2), and the possibility of basket interference on the winning tip-in angered some Wildcats fans.

Tremont Waters, who finished with 15 points to lead the Tigers, hit two free throws with 20 seconds left to give LSU — guided by former VCU coach Will Wade — a two-point lead before Johnson's free throws tied it.

Naz Reid and Emmitt Williams scored 12 each and Mays had 11 for the Tigers.

Howard went 12 for 21 from the field and 8 for 10 at the free-throw line in another impressive performance. He has scored at least 30 points in four of his last five games.

Sacar Anim added 12 points as Marquette (21-4, 10-2 Big East) won its second straight game since a disappointing 70-69 loss to St. John's.

It was mostly smooth sailing for the Golden Eagles all night. Hauser went to the locker room after he was poked in his right eye with 6:51 left, but he returned to the bench to watch the final minute with his jubilant teammates.

No. 24 Maryland 70, No. 12 Purdue 56: Jalen Smith scored 14 of his 16 points in the second half, and the host Terrapins used a strong defensive performance to end the Boilermakers' eight-game winning streak.

Down by eight at halftime, the Terrapins (19-6, 10-4 Big Ten) took the lead for the first time with 10 minutes left before pulling away. The comeback was fueled by Smith, Eric Alaya and fellow freshman Aaron Wiggins.

Maryland outscored Purdue 40-18 in the second half, limiting the Boilermakers to 1-for-16 shooting from beyond the arc.

Carsen Edwards scored 24 for Purdue (17-7, 10-3), but was limited to seven points after halftime on 2-for-13 shooting. The Boilermakers went 6 for 36 from the floor in the second half.

Boston College 66, Pittsburgh 57: Ky Bowman scored 14 points, with eight rebounds and seven assists, and BC overcame the loss of injuries to three of its starters to send the Panthers to their 21st straight road loss.

Jayla Wade, a Heritage High graduate, added eight points, three rebounds and three assists for R-MC. Teammate Charlotte Woods recorded her sixth double-double of the season with 13 points and 14 rebounds.

Jayla Harris scored 26 points and Amanda Gerni 18 for the Marlins (13-11, 10-7), who were undone by 26 turnovers.

Honors: Old Dominion guard Ajah Wayne was named the National Freshman of the Week by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. She averaged 17.5 points, 7.5 rebounds, 3.5 assists and four steals in two games. ...

Apprentice’s Sabre Clegg was named the U.S. Collegiate Athletic Association Division I Player of the Week. She averaged 19.5 points and nine rebounds in games in a win against Regent and a loss to Bluefield State.